Results 81 to 90 of about 606 (143)
“Banner” Rule over Mongolian Tribes by the Qing Dynasty: The Case of Oirat Otoks
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the measures adopted by Qing Dynasty 清朝 to rule Oirat 厄魯特 Otoks 顎拓克 after the collapse of Jungar 準噶爾 government and to elucidate principles for ruling Mongolian tribes by examining the process of the “Banner (旗)
30509378 +5 more
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Introduction. The article deals with the portrait of Manchu aristocrat heshuo Guo-qinwang Yunli (1697–1738) — the younger brother of Qing Yongzheng emperor and the uncle of Qianlong emperor.
Leonid A. Bobrov
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How to Defeat a Demon: The Function of the Oirat Folk Narrative about Burning the Female Devil
The paper introduces the results of a case study that attempts to uncover the functions and probable genesis of a group of satirical tales told by the Mongolian peoples. Based on the example of one of the stories, about Argachi, a Til ...
Nosov, Dmitrii Alekseevich
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Доклад посвящен трем уникальным рукописям буддийского содержания на ойратском "ясном письме", принадлежавших сыну императора Канси Юньли (1697-1738). Эти рукописи приобрел будущий академик В.П.Васильев (1818-1900) во время своего пребывания в Пекине в ...
Успенский Владимир Леонидович
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At a newly prospected site on the south-western shore of the Issyk-Kul Lake in the Ala-Bel mountainous region, three Tibetan inscriptions done as graffiti of small dimensions were discovered.
Л. Германн +3 more
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Population genomics of East Asian ethnic groups. [PDF]
Pan Z, Xu S.
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Topshur, Biiv: Oirat music instruments
This video explores the Biive and Topshur, two of the oldest Oirat Mongolian instruments. The creation of the Biive is intertwined with tales of Buddha and the Ghost.
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The author studies the problem associated with the appearance in Russian archival documents of the second and third decades of the 17th century of references to people called Chekars, as part of the Oirat Derbets who were dwelling in southern Siberia ...
Baatr U. Kitinov
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Esen: The Rise and Fall of the Oirat Taishi
The article is dedicated to the rise and fall of Esen, the leader of the Oirat people in the mid-15th century. The research traces Esen's path from taishi to self-proclaimed khan, analyzing both the factors behind his rapid ascent and the reasons for his equally swift decline. The foundation of Esen's power was laid by his father, Togon, who managed to
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